Bob,
Obviously, you can't compare performance on the basis of one bow first bare and then backed, especially when the first broke because it's back was overstrained and the bow was still fresh. That clearly wasn't a durable bow. Time will tell if the backed version is. I will try to chronograph it today. It still seems to be a faster bow than most of what I've built so far.
I have backed four bows with sisal so far, and they have never failed in tension. One I gave to a friend, one broke from the belly due to a dry fire, one is waiting for a stronger belly lam as it overpowers the light density hazel belly (chrysalled all over the place) and then there is this one.
my experience: it's cheap and easy to come by, it's easy to apply, it's easy to add weight to a sisal back and even do tiller adjustments by adding backing.
To me it combines some of the good features of both sinew (high strain) and bamboo (high stiffness) for backings. No need for power tools like band saw and belt sander, dozens of clamps like with a bamboo backing.
It doesn't have the obvious advantage of sinew (shrinking as it dries), so usually (didn't want to push my luck here) I reverse-brace the bow while applying the sisal, so as to pre-load the sisal in a bow at rest and take advantage of the fact that it can stretch more than 2%.
It mostly widens the toolbox for the bowyer